Lee M. Herring and Leonard Walter Robinson v. Christopher Todd Childers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2004
Docket13-02-00190-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lee M. Herring and Leonard Walter Robinson v. Christopher Todd Childers (Lee M. Herring and Leonard Walter Robinson v. Christopher Todd Childers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee M. Herring and Leonard Walter Robinson v. Christopher Todd Childers, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion




NUMBER 13-02-190-CV

COURT OF APPEALS


THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS


CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG





LEE M. HERRING AND

LEONARD WALTER ROBINSON,                                        Appellants,


v.


CHRISTOPHER TODD CHILDERS,                                         Appellee.





On appeal from the 23rd District Court

of Matagorda County, Texas.





MEMORANDUM OPINION


Before Justices Hinojosa, Castillo, and Chavez


Memorandum Opinion by Justice Castillo


         Appellants Lee M. Herring and Leonard Walter Robinson filed a lawsuit against appellee Christopher Todd Childers, alleging personal injuries sustained in a vehicular accident. The presiding judge of the trial court overruled their objection to the assignment of a visiting judge. From this decision, Herring and Robinson assert one issue, contending that the trial court erred in overruling their objection. We affirm.

I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

         Three judges were involved in the proceedings below. The Honorable Ben Hardin presided as judge of the trial court. Herring and Robinson previously had objected to the assignment of a visiting judge. On the date set for their jury trial, Judge Hardin denied their objection to a second visiting judge. Herring, Robinson, and their attorney did not appear for trial. Childers and his counsel appeared and announced ready. On Childers's motion, Judge Bass dismissed the case for want of prosecution. Herring and Robinson filed a motion for new trial, which Judge Hardin also denied. This appeal ensued.

II. RELEVANT FACTS

A. The Day of Trial

         The record shows that on December 3, 2001, the presiding judge of the trial court, Judge Ben Hardin, was handling a docket in Brazoria County. In his place in Matagorda County was visiting judge Ogden Bass. Judge Bass called Herring and Robinson's case for jury trial. Neither Herring, Robinson, nor their counsel was present. Childers and his counsel appeared and announced ready for trial. In introducing himself to the venire to qualify them for jury service, the visiting judge stated, "I retired in December of '98 and took what's called 'senior judge status.'" After qualifying the panel, the visiting judge recessed the proceedings until 10:30 that morning, explaining to the venire he was at a point where he could not use them "right now."

         Outside the presence of the venire, the visiting judge stated:

Earlier this morning I returned a call to Judge Ben Hardin, who is sitting in Angleton, Texas. He informed me that the Plaintiff in this matter had filed an objection to this Judge, this assigned Judge, and that Judge Hardin was going to deny it because the Plaintiff had filed an objection to the Honorable Joe Ned Dean in this particular case. As we understand the law, they are entitled to only one objection. Judge Hardin was having prepared an order denying, as well as attaching the necessary papers to go along with the order. He felt, as I do, that he should be the one to decide the matter rather than this assigned Judge. He indicated – well, he told me that he would have that order over here as soon as he could, he was going to fax it to this particular Court. So that's where we stand.


         What is your position, [Childers's counsel]?


         Childers's counsel stated he did not know about the objection "until Your Honor just told me this morning." He added that Childers was ready to pick a jury and "since the Plaintiff failed to appear, the defense makes a motion that the case be dismissed on the merits of prejudice." Childers's counsel subsequently explained outside the presence of the venire:

We had settlement discussions last week, me and [Plaintiff's counsel]. The discussion was that if we can't get this case settled, then we're going to be going to trial; and she acknowledged that, yes, we would be going to trial today. So that's essentially what she said. And it was her request for a trial setting in the case that brought us here this morning. In any event, that's basically what the conversation was. I don't want to misquote her.


         The visiting judge requested that the bailiff "sound the names of Lee M. Herring and Leonard Walter Robinson each three times in a loud, distinct voice in the hallways of the courthouse and report your findings." The visiting judge then asked the district clerk to telephone plaintiffs' counsel. The bailiff reported that at "10:10, no response." Next, the visiting judge showed Childers's counsel a copy of a facsimile received from plaintiffs' counsel's office and a copy of Judge Hardin's order signed that day. The order denied Herring and Robinson's objection to the assigned judge. After correction of a typographical error as to the trial date, the visiting judge called a recess. When the proceedings resumed, the district clerk reported she had called plaintiffs' counsel twice. The phone rang three or four times and then beeped without a recorded message. "It just beeps," she said.

         The visiting judge then asked Childers's counsel about the history of the case as to "dealings" with plaintiffs' counsel. Childers's counsel stated that the case was dismissed once before for failure to respond to discovery and a $200 sanction assessed. He added that plaintiffs' counsel had filed a motion for reinstatement, which the trial court had granted. Childers's counsel relayed other instances of problems with discovery and communication. After bringing in the venire and again recessing the case, the visiting judge called the case once more. Childers's counsel moved that the case be dismissed for want of prosecution. The visiting judge granted the motion and discharged the venire. The visiting judge then admitted for the record five exhibits, including Court's Exhibit 1, which was a copy of the docket for that morning. The visiting judge stated that the case was the only case left for trial by jury because the others settled or were reset. He continued:

Mary Schubert, the Court coordinator for the 23rd Judicial District Court, who is presently in Angleton, Texas, received a facsimile transmittal sheet earlier this morning from the Plaintiffs' lawyer . . ., with an objection to this assigned Judge; and Judge Ben Hardin made a ruling denying the objection to the assigned Judge, which contained several different attachments to it. That will be marked as Court's No. 2.

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Lee M. Herring and Leonard Walter Robinson v. Christopher Todd Childers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-m-herring-and-leonard-walter-robinson-v-christ-texapp-2004.